As some people suggested in the thread about the way to help those who are new to Resolve, I propose to make here a compilation of all the tutorials and doc that could be relevant to solve issues regarding the software itself.

It is not about achieving this or that kind of particular look, but only about questions such as : how do I manage users, how can I improve the playback, what is the difference between primary and logs... (for the rest, maybe it is only a matter of experience, I don't know).

And for everyting about advanced colorgrading thoughts, the LiftGammaGain forum is full of very smart and experimented people.

Any help or new tutorials are welcome if it fits the purpose of technical and not esthetic topics (I don't know if the difference makes a lot of sense, but it would not be about achieving a sort of mainstream orange and teal look, but how to use the scopes, the curves, the difference beetwen offset and gain, etc...)

I would also praise Warren Eagles over on FXPHD. I like what Warren has to say because (like me) he comes from a telecine background, so he's been color correcting for more than 25 years. Warren also has a great sense of humor and a good personality, and that comes across very well in his tutorials.

This is sorely in need of an update, and hopefully they'll do one for 12.5 soon.

I would add that MixingLight has a sale going on right now and they did just unveil their 12.5 add-on course, and Patrick Inhofer and the guys over there are very bright and know their stuff.

I also highly recommend the LiftGammaGain.com colorist discussion group, which encompasses much more than just Resolve. They're down for the moment due to maintenance but are scheduled to be back on 11/27/2016.

I find the key for all colorists is to open your mind to different ways of doing things. Once in awhile, even if I run into a complete idiot doing a tutorial on the web, they spark some interest in a new mode or a new approach to an operation I've done a thousand times, and sometimes it leads me to try something different. It never hurts to weigh the pros and cons of different approaches. In that respect, color correction is a constantly-evolving kind of process not unlike the role of the cinematographer. No one lighting setup will work for all situations, and I find the same is true for color.

But then, my philosophy has always been "I just bang on the knobs and then stop when the picture doesn't suck." That generally works for me, but the key is doing it quickly and making the client happy.

Just edited the list with the link suggested by mark and added two books : The color correction handbook and The definitive guide to editing with Da Vinci Resolve...It is good to read things on paper sometimes...

And if there are any who have difficulties with the language of William Shakespeare, there are tutorials Davinci Resolve V12 in the language of Molière (When you have not practiced English for a long time... ) at VIDEO EFFECT PROD. I started my first weapons with version 11 and I learned a lot for a price really very modest view the quality to start well with this software. (Http://www.videoeffectsprod.fr/). Of course today there is a V12.x

I add to the post of Jean Claude the videos form the yak yak yak website about resolve, in French, and mostly about the editing page.J'ajoute au message de Jean Claude les vidéos du site Yakyakyak sur Resolve, qui concernent principalement les fonctions de montage. http://yakyakyak.fr/category/yaktv/

Hi Jean-Claude, Very tecky-geeky thing...very specific. Not sure this can be very helpfull for someone who just want to know if a particular GPU works with Resolve. But it reminded me that I forgot the configuration guide from BMD in the list. I'll add it in an edit. As always, GPU power is just a matter of speed for the workflow and renders...and doesn't improve the skills.

I've seen a lot of tutos and thraing course, including from Lynda, Learn Colorgrading, and a lot on youtube as well, and the ones from Goats Eyes are symply the best to start and understand Resolve.They have a didactic approach that none of the other tutos have.

Their tutos are free, which is unbelievable. I would have paid for such a nice work.I hope they'll do the same for Fusion.

Good stuff, thanks for all the links. I'm relatively new to DaVinci Resolve and found most of the above tutorials very helpful.

One thing that worked really well for me while (still) learning it is to look for solutions on YouTube. You can find tons of short clips of exactly what you may need to accomplish. Most of them are under 5 minutes long so even in midst of editing I can switch back to watch a tutorial.

Even simple things like how to do fade in/fade out I learned from YouTube. I had no idea you needed to use key frames and opacity and now I discovered a totally new function I would probably learn sometime few months down the road.

Ya, so I am not good at reading manuals, I think visualizing functionality is much better, for me anyway!

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